Why You Should Consider a Living Christmas Tree

7 thoughts on “Why You Should Consider a Living Christmas Tree

  1. Jumped over from Kate McClelland’s reblog, where I commented:
    ~~~~~~~~~~~
    Mine stay up for so long, “fake” is the only choice that makes ANY sense for me. My folks bought a living tree one year – and planted it outside. Alas! Too close to the house, so it grew too big to remain. A warning for all.
    xx,
    mgh
    (Madelyn Griffith-Haynie – ADDandSoMuchMore dot com)
    – ADD Coach Training Field founder; ADD Coaching co-founder –
    “It takes a village to educate a world!”

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      1. Inside? My folks was on a screened in porch we could see through the sliding doors. You must be great at tree watering. My friend Peggy’s starts drooping almost as soon as the last present is unwrapped on Christmas Eve. By January 1 it is READY to go.

        I rent, so no yard of my own, and the tree goes up for Thanksgiving and NEVER comes down before 12th Nite – which is the day I have exchanged gifts for decades now. If friends are visiting later in January (or so), I don’t take it down until even later.

        I’m such a Christmas nut anyway that you can barely see what’s underneath the ornaments. I rely on a live wreath from “tree-scraps” to supply a whiff of that good Christmas smell.

        Merry Christmas to all – however you choose to do it.
        xx,
        mgh

        Liked by 1 person

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